Thursday, January 29, 2015

The Book

We released a book: The Art of Memory Forensics. For those of you who are considering teaching memory forensics or even operating systems, we have a syllabus and evidence files on our website that you may use in your classes.

Trainings

We have several trainings in line for this year, public and private. Public trainings currently include:

Reston, VA April 13th-17th 2015

New York, NY May 11th-15th 2015

Amsterdam, NL August 31st-September 4th 2015

We are also currently working on new course offerings coming out this year. So keep an eye out for those!

Talks

I'll be speaking at the upcoming CEIC conference in Las Vegas, on Wednesday May 20th 2015. Apparently there is a discount code if you register before January 31st: JANS4v15

The Volatility team will also give another talk at NYC4SEC during the week of the training in NYC this coming May. More details will be given for that talk soon.

5 comments:

The book is awesome and complements very well with the memory forensics course. Still only half way thro going over the book. I have a question, do you have any tutorial on using volshell. I want to explore volshell like a pro and require some help.

This book is a huge hit and complements very well with the Memory Forensics course your team provides. I am only half way through and planning to complete the Windows section at least by Q2. A request I have is to see if you have any training material that discuss volshell in depth. I am not a python scripter and that makes it little bit challenging. Let me know.

We do cover volshell in our training course, however, you would have to take the class in order to gain access to that material. That being said, since it's a popular request, I'm considering doing a blog serious on different uses of volshell, for example: starting out with basics and then covering what I've used volshell for during the week (or on a daily basis).

Its good news that you are going to blog about volshell. To answer your question, I did take your memory forensics course last May and I loved it. While the course discusses about volshell, it did not go in great detail.